Weather that makes you shudder is a dangerlight, signalling Flu ahead! At the very first hint of these too-familiar symptoms take instant action! Apply THERMOGBNE Medicated Wadding! WITH Tl-IERMOGENG DON'T RISK YOUR JOB! Remember! Every extra day you take oif work in these difficult times may be risking your job! Tackle Flu in the quickest, easiest-and most natural way! SOOTHlNG AND RELIEVING WITHOUT DISCOMFORT. Tiinsroorrrn is a scientifi- cally prepared medicated cotton wool-clean, harmless, simple to apply. Without any discomfort to you, it goes on continually soothing and relieving——dailing with the Flu before it mn develop. Keep a box of THIRMOGENE handy all through the winter. You ant afford to talz risks with Flu! At the first sign of a chill, nip KEEP A BOX HANDY. Tnnraocsroz. it in the bud by applying Working by the timehonoured method ofcounter-irritation, it stimulates the surface of the skin and diverts the blood away from the congestion beneath. Nonnal, healthy circulation is restored and the danger of comp liizitions is reduced. ' l can. s. MATHIESON _,I- IL Bell. l). L Mnfhleson, Ll- Jhlpplng bag!’ Wllljbmfiltllgh. ed without charge hyinpplylng Mall. T. Holmnn, Ltd, Bum mEISlIIBQP. if. l. ‘M, ‘ " lrenenled by Alfred Fraser, Inc. 212 Filth Avenue New York, N. Y. 4 rofessienalv Bards -.;5TEWART 8r LOWTHER I - l. D. STEWART. K. C. r N. W. LOWTIIEB. QABBISTERS, SOLICITORS, ITO 84 Great George Street rsaw runs l 1/ L. HOME or Good Meat & Fish CHOICE BEEF FRESH PORK SAUSAGE HAM AND BACON - t risasn HADDOCK SALMON —- HALIBUT SMELTS -— SCALLOPS NOTICE WE BUY DRESSED DOES NOT CLOG THE PORES or THE SKIN. Bemuse Timiwooanii i. a Medicated w Waddirig, it does not clog the pores of the akin, like messy poultiees. It can be taken off little by c“ little, thus obviating theriskof chill from suddm exposure—a.nd each layer retains its effectiveness M, for seve-ril days. Don't go another day without THERMOGENB in the house. Have it ready, and~as soon as there‘s the slightest suggestion of a chill or cold-put it where the pain is, and carry on! lflsewordTfinnofenchflkvegitadhidn-nrlolrhefiamogmefilldqlondom England. w Relnnnbdhidqsurhemxninduboxuiddmflgndane-e/J/I/Wwa vs , . 3 V Kl l ‘ re, ~ .ml ‘ t“ ' HEDICATED WADDINC O " K€€P IT IN TH€ HOUS€ b: x < ldqlqsnmndbuhrlaflAnnbsflnddkklxhhtCdllnlmddfi-llhlefidflueqTavnm rt‘ ec " ‘ 4. .1. "ll l M‘ l what happened to the man who Billie had a. parcel left for him ‘ swallowed l IP00!" H9 001115119 at the door by a messenger. It was C‘ Pa‘ Lamps‘!!! f? Co- stir. urralppcd 1n brown paper which was b5 u 323mg)’; t slightly torn, showing a Christmas “k Madam a a t 55mg“ decorated box. The package was "1 '- - ddressed to him and marked: Public Auction Sales f‘ . .. wi. m, L Not to be opened tin onrstmas. His mother told him t0 take it up to his room as it was, bub-"Oh, Gee, Mom, let's have just a. lttle look to see what it is now." On permission, however, he reluctantly left it in his morn unopened. But. in the evening curiosity won. He undid the wrnppng, took the lid off the box which showed the only contents to be a card, on which was written- “We knew you would.’ i..__.c_..i.____ COUGHS Take lull a maspeonlal of Miami's In snolnlsn. Hear Minardfi. inhale ir. Aloe ruh h well lnln your rlmr. moivar ‘r0 LOAN. nous J2 You'll gel rolloll EVERY nay ' I McLEOD & BENTLEY, , sac PHONE s51 ' ' s. a. nun-ran! h‘ - I W. E. BENTLEY, K. O. e Banister and Atlorney-at-law I Office: 180 Richmond Street ' MONEY T0 LOAN k McDONALD _& McPl-IEE . A. U. A. MeDoNALu. I. I‘. Merlin‘ ~ . Bsrrlslern. Attorneys, Ito. . - ‘ , MONEY TO LOAN F i Biley Building _ llfl-i-M-lmo-llnll! I , _ Barrister & Solicitors y» _. Money to Loan ., " Charlottetown and Monique y MARK n1.) ivfiouican financier-sis. ioaicrron. s-ro. ’ MONK! TO LOAN moron Bleak. Charlottetown. I'll. . incur snaw. x. c. r46 Dliceu - mm Block. Grafton Street Charlottetown Willa and mau- emu. . u (‘durum not) "ammo-own; r. s. i. w. n. nanny. fir. a IIIFIHII lolldlll ' We are well ENVELOPES, UFFISE SUPPLIES PAPERS. FOOLSCAP ENS. TYPEWR. CARBON Blue WRITER lml Black), RIBBONS stocked with W It I 'l‘ l N G PA P- ITER PAPER, PAPERS. (Purple, TYPE for rmnsnwoon, REMING. 101v. L. o. smrn, aru- READS. LET COPYING rs FILES and B nrrtncr nvxs. Pl.‘ rm PAPER, ran. OFFICE INDING cases, NAME ronnms, as. PENCILS, INK. srarvns. spasms, norm. ram PENS. mum/rm raw INK. nurrrnvo PAPER, DAY B00 JOURNAL NOTE and ma, KS. LEDGERH, s. casn BOOKS, RECEIPT BOOKS, at LOWEST PRICES. flINARD‘$ lLlNlmzNT zvoncs I NOTICE is hereby given that Benilnlin Benlanun of the City of Charlottetown in the County of Queens in the Province of Prince Edward Island, Merchant, will ap- ply to the Parliament of Canada, at the next session thereof roi- a Bill of Divorce from his wife Georg. l8 Bflllkmin on the ground of ad- ultery. Dated at Charlottetown, Province of Prince Edward Island the 30th dB! of December, A. D., 193i. BENJAMIN BENJAMIN llfldl-Zl-ill-lhur-Sl ins ‘ll/p with incredulous eyes. So ‘of the world. and would never let ElE flflfl-glljLQl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Gres By Coneo a John ham b Girl rdia Merrel n (Continuedfi She laughed again. . . . It grated on his nerves, badly, that laugh of hers. "Her cousin Oliver is head of Greslianfs. . . ' Did you know?" The cat in her voice WI-l pining now. “OI were going ho marry. . . What was the business mat-fer, Jim? Did it occur to you to ask?" The question came suddenly and seemed to ht him. There was sil- ence while their eyes met. Then: “Don't be a. fool, Jim; you lmow well enough why she has gone. - ." Silence again, while their look still held. "Oliver Ames," she added. He drew a breath, and stood quite still . . . Suddenly she rose. and moved up to him in her thin, angular way, and put her arms up round his neck. "What do you care . thereis...me. .. rpered, straining her lttlc face up to his. For a moment he stood there passively, with Jocelyn clinging a- round his neck, too duinlounded b0 do anythinx or to think clearly. When he did recover from his as- tonishment to think anythng at all, his first thought was that Jocelyn must suddenly have gone completely mad. He was in no mood lo be tactful or soothing, or even to feel personally flattered. He fired uncermcnicusly to loosen her clinging hands, bu‘. she only clung the tighter. "You do love me, don't you, Jim And. Jim, I've always loved you. . . always! Why were you so mad =15 Yo so and marry Lucy? What made you do if? Didn't; you guess that I cared? Didn't you know? Jim, I thought I'd make it clear. r1 ' He wrcnched her hands apart and flung her airay. Jocelyn, don't be a fool!" he said roughly. “You're talking utter non- sense." She stumbled back from, him, her thin little hands clenched tight over her breast. "Nonsense?" she echoed. "It-it nonsense, Jim? Can you stand there and tell rne-it. is nonsense?" The words were si/umbling in a tangle from her lips, and her dark eyes seemed almost to be bumlng bright in her pale face. "Of course it's nonsense," he re- torted. in the same blunt, uneqi- vocal way. "But, Jim, before you met Lucy, you absolutely haunted me. You were always here you practically lived here. . . . Everyone thought you cared for me; everyone looked upon you as my property. . . . Why, it was only through us that you met the Greshams st all!" He laughed shortly. “Well, if I haunted you Jocelyn, that, was why." "That you wanted to meet the Gresham?" ' ,. in "Yea." . “Lucy in particular." "Had you already made up your mind to marry her?" "Yes, definitely, absolutely and unchangeably." She backed away further, look- . . while ." she wlfs- pale, pesky much of everything she did was, as Lucy always suspected, sheer- got- fing, that it would be difficult to say lust how much of the surprise she showed was genuine. She was cer- tainly huri; but only by the most "omplete sell-deception could she ‘magine she had reason to be sur- prsed. But. she had acted so much that she probably never got her acting separated from reality, her- self. She liked to imagine herself one of the man-conque mg en her-self really believe that any rnehi’ she aimed at could remain uncon- quered. And her own feelings were always matters of such deep im- portance to her that probably at But 1 wasn't sure until now that 1i was true." "Why should you be sure now?“ "How could you have loved her before you even met her?" "r had met her. But vef! i=- formally. I wanted to meet he!‘ formally." "Ono meeting? And you made ll? mm“ ' 3' your nrnd to marry her. Those "He has been mad about her for romances m, W; o; gage, _ , ," years. . . . Everyone said they she walnut "I'm telling you what is true." he said infiexlbly. Her scuffing man- ner softened. "Do you really mean it. Jim?" she pleaded. “Do you really mean that you don't love me any more?" "Any more," he questioned ir- ritabily. "’ have never loved W11. Jocelyn. I don't know what's given you this ridiculous idea. As far as I can remember, I've never said one word to Justify you in imaginllfl that I cared for you in any will other than a friend." "You have! You have!" she con- tradicted wildly. “Everyone thought you cared for me! Everyone ex- Pwlcd you to marry mei" i ‘Then you must have spread the idea, because it never as much as entered my head." When he had said that, he seemed w realm that he was being rather brutally frank. for he gulled up short, and added more gently: "Look here, I'm sorry 1f Pve hurt you or offended you in any way, but, of course, you don't mean all you say. You're exaggerating, aren't you? sorriethingk upset. you. and you don't absolutely realize all you are saying. . . ." she broke down then; sank into the couch, hid her face in her hands and cried bitterly. But he remained unmoved by any pity for her, because she gave wny with such a. weak abandon that her giv- ing way only disgustedrhlm further. A mental picture of how Lucy had stood up to the blow he had dealt her on the evening of their wedding day came to deepen the feeling of contempt he couldn't help feeling for Jocelyn's dsploy of uncontrolled emotion. He was re- pelled and exasperated. "Don't be silly, Jocelyn. For incrcy's sake, pull yourself togeth- er," he said, utterly out of humor with her. she raised a tear-streaked face There was nothing appenlng about this‘. little pesky face all, blotchcd with tears. But again he realized the bnital bluntness of his words. and added: “Of course I know you don't mean it. . . . It's Just. . . ." But he go; no further. His attempt at soothing her was ill-timed. It flick- ed he; vanity almost more sting- inglyt than his brutal outspoken ncss had. She sprang “,3 from tlr couch, her tlfri llifle body quiver ing from head go fool; her pal. face while a8 a sheet; her eye: feverishly bright. "I don't mean it? And your: sorry if I'm hurt? And I'm to pull myself together. . . . You're sorry. . . ." She cried out, flingng thr words back at him with passionate contempt. “sorry! Thanks. . . . The Flavor olYour l Cooking is Won-I derfullylmproved ‘ The Tenth Day of February, A. D. 1932 MAY we show you how to put new flavor in your old favorite dishes? This little book "New Magic in the Kitchen" is filled with recipes for the moat delightful] things to eat- puddings. cakes, salads, ice 'crolm—- I the moment she suffered as acute- mo mud new“ bun‘ . ly as 1r they were lasting emotion. Try "Ii! Pwilwffll‘ "Then you didn't merry her for 6'9"” m“ Fwd“! love!" she cried suddenly, s. renew- $223152... g‘ 23'5"“ m“. l teaspoon all Mcup rslalna ed ring ol trliunph in her voice. “That much of what she said odlsa c snowman a “a us. was true, at least." L-iln-n-T-Earaninu ...a¢?.l'in':¢s¢:lu flew snlnulee. Serve hororoold. “Did she tell you that?" he ask- ed sharply. “Oh, she told me everything! JlillN CARI] At the request of a large number The Borden I15 George 8t. Gentleman: Please Ncuae.....-............ Barter & 0o. . AND GLASSIS FITTED OUUU. 4 EYES TESTED do everything possible in the best p. ii. w. tarpon ' l 1. s. ranoa l ' ' .OWIII¢I'II¢I y W, fllllfinsool semi. Limited same time Iivinl Ward 3 every at- tention. ars-i-is-ru. of electors of Ward 3, I will offer myself as a candidate in the corn- ing civic election. 1f elected I will interests of the city and at the I lulely free. Llmliad Qfllll Yours respectfully, m T. B. QUINN. “m. _, , - ~ an. w-e-ocasmesuwnwvwi-rwpi - -_.___-._ . JANUARY 28. 19 s2 l». Here’s a box 0f sheer delzlglat! Christie’s Soda Wafers! Taste ‘them . . . so light . . . so crisp . . . so flaky. And . . ,. like all Christie’s Biscuits . . . always fresh as fresh can be. It’s no wonder that so many people prefer Christieb Soda Wafers, hrisliés * DAWAFERS Proof: Prove oftenrnough that you cannot do n. thing and you will probably end by proving that you can do it. .____i__. land I don't mean all I say. Don't fseilf. . ." she went on. “She con- . . . . I think you'll find that IIflded the whole thing to me. I 1-10. . _ . You can't pick me up know you didn't many her be- and throw me down when it pleesqcause you loved her. I know W" es you, and get away with it. . .",d.ldn't. . . -" "There's no question of it. . . ."( H1! 1M0 dflfliellfid- he put in, trying t9 stem the tor-l “We'll leave my feeling for Lucy rm; of he; Irght out of itl" ho answered with "I know your marriage with Uucy a ‘sudden flash o! tonvpcr. ls a fiasco. she told me so, her- (To Be Continued) Two dwellings: God has two dwellings-one in heaven and the other in a meek and thankful heart-Izaak Walton. CIVIC GCSIDII. In pursuance of An Act of the Legislature of the Province of Prince Edward Island, made and passed in the Twenty-first year olflie reign of His llInjest-y King (irnrgu V., Chapter 81, entituled “An Act to consolidate and amend the several Acts lllcorpurnllnl: the City of Charlottetown”, and all Acts in amendment thereof or ln addition thereto, and An Act of the Legislature of the Province of Prince Edward Island, made and passed in the §nradr==".'.irc lured r Flltletli year of the Reign of Her Majesty Queen Victoria, Chapter 8, enllfnled, “The Clear- loltetown Water Works Act”, and all the Acts in amendment thereof or in addition llierc- to, and An Act of the Legislature of the Province of Prince Edward Island iniule and puss- ed In the Sixty-first year of the reign of Her Mn tltuled “The Charlottetown Sewerage Act’ ditlon thereto. jesty Queen Victoria, Chapter l2, en- ’, and all Acts in amendment thereof or in ad- I do hereby give PUBLIC NOTICE that an election of n Mayor for ilic said Cily, three Commissioners of Sewer and Water Supply for the said Cily, and oi‘ one person lo serve as Councillor in the City Council for each of the Wards Nos. 1, 2 and 8 of the said City and two persons to serve as Councillors in the said Council for Ward No. 4 of the said City and three persons lo serve ns Councillors in said Council for Ward N0. 5 in the snld City lie- lng in all n Mayor, three Commissioners of Sewiir and Wafer Supply und eight Councillors representing the City as follows :- ron warm NUMBER 01m For warm NUMBER TWO son ‘warm NUMBER THREE son warm NUMBER rovn r01: warm NUMBER ‘FIVE oivii councilman our: COUNCILLOR 0m: COUNCILLOR TWO COUNCILLORS THREE COUNCILLORS WILL BE HELD 0N Wednesday AT THE SEVERAL POLLING PLACES AS DESCRIBED IN PROCLAMATION POSTED IN THE SEVERAL WABDS 0F THE SAID CITY. Nomination D8!» Wednesday, February 311' A. D. 1932 M. .1119. Olilce of ‘the City Clerk, City Hall from the hour ol l! noon till the hour of 4 o'clock ' in the afternoon or the same day. For Qualifications of Electors see Act 21, George V, Chapter 81- c; r. NICHOLSON, on; Clerk,‘ City Clerk's Olllce, Charlottetown, January ism. 1m‘